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"You Wreck Me" is a song by American musician Tom Petty, the fourth track on his second solo studio album, Wildflowers (1994). The song was released as the second single from the album and became a concert staple. While the song did not chart on the US Billboard Hot 100, it did peak at number two on the Album Rock Tracks chart.
Wildflowers is the second solo studio album by American musician Tom Petty, released on November 1, 1994, [1] by Warner Bros. Records.It was the first album released by Petty after signing a contract with Warner Bros., where he had recorded as part of the Traveling Wilburys.
"You and I Will Meet Again" Tom Petty: Into the Great Wide Open: 1991 [4] "You and Me" Tom Petty: The Last DJ: 2002 [11] "You Can Still Change Your Mind" Tom Petty Mike Campbell: Hard Promises: 1981 [14] "You Got Lucky" † Tom Petty Mike Campbell: Long After Dark: 1982 [10] "You Tell Me" Tom Petty: Damn the Torpedoes: 1979 [13] "You're Gonna ...
I Will Run to You; I Won't Back Down; I'm Free (Pimp C song) If You Belonged to Me; Inside Out (Traveling Wilburys song) Insider (song) Into the Great Wide Open (song) It Ain't Nothin' to Me; It's Good to Be King (song)
The title track of the compilation, "The Best of Everything" was originally released in 1985 on the album Southern Accents; the song was later released in two different versions on the posthumous compilations An American Treasure (2018), and this album.
Live at the Fillmore 1997 is a 2022 live album compiling Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers 20-concert residency at The Fillmore in San Francisco in January and February 1997. . The full 'deluxe' [1] version of the album includes 72 tracks pulled primarily from the last six concerts performed in the residency, [2] [3] [4] of which 58 are songs and 14 are 'spoken word' interlu
"Wildflowers" is a song written by Tom Petty and the opening track from the album of the same name. The song became quite popular in concerts, and though it was not released as a single, it charted at #16 on the Billboard Hot Rock Songs chart, [2] at #11 on the Billboard Rock Digital Song Sales [3] and at #3 on the Billboard Lyric Find. [4]
On AllMusic, reviewer Matthew Greenwald wrote about the song, "One if [sic] the most self-effacing and personal songs to reach the Top Ten charts in the 1990s, "It's Good to Be King" deals with the phenomenon of rock & roll stardom."